Like so many Juicy Lucy stories, Rich Holmes' began with a layover.
He was flying from New York to Los Angeles five years ago, and he had just enough time in Minneapolis to leave the airport for a bite. He went where so many food tourists have gone before him, Matt's Bar (3500 Cedar Av. S., Mpls., mattsbar.com).
"I said to my wife, 'I've been hearing about Juicy Lucy the last 20 years. Let's go to Matt's,' " Holmes said. "We go to Matt's. And it changed my life."
Yes, the legendary cheese-stuffed and onion-topped burger (spelled Jucy Lucy at Matt's) taught his taste buds about a Minneapolis-born molten heaven. It also hatched a business idea for the fast-talking, straight-shooting New Yorker.
A real estate investor, Holmes decided then and there that if he ever got into the restaurant business, "I'm going to sell Juicy Lucy burgers."
That time has come.
In May, Holmes will open a Texas and Carolina-style barbecue restaurant with a pitmaster straight from the renowned Franklin Barbecue in Austin, Texas.
He's opening it on Staten Island, the borough of New York City best known for not having a bridge to Manhattan — a place Holmes refers to as "Staten Italy."